The Army has relieved 129 battalion and brigade commanders since 2003 and implemented several initiatives in its ongoing effort to hold leaders and commanders accountable for their actions, senior leaders told Army Times.
“I think the narrative comes out of many soldiers who rightfully or wrongfully believe that the Army doesn’t hold senior leaders, senior military officers accountable in the same fashion they hold junior officers or enlisted,” Army Secretary John McHugh said. “I view it as a multilevel challenge, and we’re trying to respond in a number of different ways.”
Since 2003, the Army has relieved 98 battalion commanders and four lieutenant colonel staff officers, according to information provided by the Army. Twenty-four of those reliefs were conducted in combat.
In that same time period, 31 brigade commanders and four colonel staff officers were relieved; one of those was conducted in combat.
via 129 Army battalion, brigade commanders fired since 2003.
I’d like to see a breakdown on the causes for relief.
The Navy tends to be more up front about reliefs of its commanders. Hardly two weeks go by without seeing a notice in Navy Times about one. The Army, apparently, doesn’t “name and shame” to the same degree.
Which is the better approach? I think that’s open to debate. But surely publicizing the most cause most likely to get you relieved might help one or two officers avoid such activity.
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